Conflicting reports put the 7 billionth baby as having been born in a few different places (The Philippines! India! China!) but it matters little to me: for the most part the milestone is symbolic.

So .. what of it? Behind all the rhetoric and symbolism, what does this milestone really mean for us, for our families, and for our quality of life? What kind of world is the 7 billionth baby in being born into?

Lots of people have weighed in on what this all means.

As Miriam pointed out back in July, coverage of global issues related to population, health, and development can easily take on an alarmist tone, and often missing from the conversation are the voices of the people most affected. I joked in a recent piece on the PSI Healthy Lives blog that I believe it to be a convenient coincidence that the date of the 7 billionth birth corresponds with Halloween, given the extreme scare tactics that have so thoroughly characterized discussions about world population.

So today, join me in avoiding the alarmism. Here’s a great takedown of population alarmism over at the Crunk Feminist Collective. I also really like this take on the importance of comprehensive sexuality education in the context of this population milestone.

Another angle on this topic (and a way to avoid the alarmist rhetoric) is to use the population framework to raise issues related to resources, consumption, and sustainability. As Miriam noted on World Population Day, “while the number of people on earth is obviously an important factor in sustainability, climate change and resources, the more important element is often use of resources.”

My own interpretation of this milestone is that it’s cause to put a magnifying glass on youth and young people in the world. Because you can’t address the future of the planet without addressing those people who will determine it, right? Lori luh the kids. From my piece on the PSI Health Lives blog:

The 7 billion figure has been bandied about incessantly, but as Adrienne Germain pointed out in a recent Letter to the Editor published in the New York Times, there are perhaps more telling numbers to consider. “More than half of projected future population growth in developing countries (excluding China) will come from today’s adolescents and young adults,” she writes.

Overwhelmingly, these young people don’t have access to the sexual and reproductive rights and health information and services they need to lead healthy and empowered lives in a world of 7 billion people.

To address “population issues” must become synonymous with addressing their needs.

Brooklyn, NY

Lori Adelman is Executive Director of Partnerships at Feministing, where she enjoys creating and curating content on gender, race, class, technology, and the media. Lori is also an advocacy and communications professional specializing in sexual and reproductive rights and health, and currently works in the Global Division of Planned Parenthood Federation of America. A graduate of Harvard University, she lives in Brooklyn.

Lori Adelman is an Executive Director of Feministing in charge of Partnerships.

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What started the protests?

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Late last month, one thousand indigenous women took to the streets of Guatemala City to protest the violent militarization of their communities fueled by a powerful Guatemalan cement company. Their persistent and courageous organizing has helped to ...

Ed. note: This is a guest post from Grace Wilentz. Grace is a feminist activist and writer based in Dublin, Ireland. She is also a member of the South-based feminist alliance RESURJ: Realizing Sexual and Reproductive Justice. View previous coverage of Savita Halappanavar and abortion in Ireland here and here.

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Estimates of the turnout are as high as 5000, more than double last year’s numbers. Having been an activist in this movement for a while- long enough to remember when we got excited about 40 people showing up to a demonstration- ...

Ed. note: This is a guest post from Grace Wilentz. Grace is a feminist activist and writer based in Dublin, Ireland. She is also a member of the South-based feminist alliance RESURJ: Realizing Sexual and Reproductive Justice. View ...

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